About CHIDS

The Center for Health Information and Decision Systems (CHIDS) at the Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland is an academia-led effort with collaboration from industry and government affiliates, designed to research, analyze, and recommend solutions to challenges surrounding the introduction and integration of information and decision technologies into the health care system.

Through mutually-beneficial partnerships, CHIDS is structured as a research and development center with the goal of conducting rigorous research, disseminating information, managing knowledge, and coordinating collaborations among concerned stakeholders. In addition, CHIDS serves as a focal point for thought leadership around the topic of health information and decision systems. Since its inception in 2005, CHIDS has been creating thought leadership around the implementation of information and decision technologies in the healthcare domain. CHIDS is designed to research, analyze and recommend solutions to challenges surrounding the introduction and integration of information and decision technologies into the healthcare system.

CHIDS draws on the expertise of the Decision, Operations and Information Technologies (DO &IT) department at the Smith School, the University of Maryland Medical Center, University Hospital, and other assets in the University of Maryland network. CHIDS offers the benefit of a world-class staff with hundreds of published manuscripts related to technology implementation, adoption, assimilation, workflow design, decision sciences, and value of IT. The DO&IT department includes Information Systems, Operations Management and Management Science disciplines and is staffed with over 30 professors and more than 30 PhD students and research assistants. The pool of talent, knowledge and expertise in D&IT is acknowledged by several publications as a Top-5 performer in research production worldwide. The Information Systems group is ranked in the top-10 worldwide in Business Week and U.S. News and World Report.